National Post

Asia division boosts Manulife Q3 earnings

Sun Life report fair, as growth down in region

- Armina Ligaya

TORONTO • Two of Canada’s biggest insurers delivered third-quarter earnings that beat expectatio­ns but while Manulife Financial Corp.

got a boost from its Asia business, the region weighed down results for Sun Life Financial Corp.

Manulife’s profit for the quarter ended Sept. 30 surged 42 per cent to $1.57 billion compared to the earlier-year period, helped by a roughly 22 per cent increase in core earnings in Asia that helped offset a drop in net income at home.

Sun Life reported net income of $567 million to mark a 30 per cent drop year over year, but beat analyst expectatio­ns with its underlying net income of $730 million for the quarter. Still, the insurer’s underlying net income from Asia declined by 15 per cent.

“Our Canadian, U.S. and Asset Management businesses each delivered doubledigi­t earnings growth, while Asia results were lower this quarter from higher levels of new business strain,” Sun Life chief executive Dean Connor told analysts on a call Thursday.

Canadian insurers have targeted Asia for growth in recent years, positionin­g themselves to benefit from burgeoning middle classes and demographi­c trends in the region. The strategy has paid off in previous quarters for both insurers in terms of strong profit growth, but provided differing contributi­ons in the latest period.

Still, both insurers beat

analyst expectatio­ns. Sun Life reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.20, ahead of the $1.17 expected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters Eikon. Manulife reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.75, ahead of the $0.67 expected. Power Financial Corp.,

whose subsidiari­es include Great-West Lifeco Inc., reported on Thursday adjusted net earnings attributab­le to shareholde­rs of $578 million or $0.81 per share, up from $0.65 a year ago but short of the $0.82 expected by analysts.

Shares of Manulife closed up more than four per cent in Toronto at $22.33 on Thursday, while Power Financial’s shares were relatively flat at $28.64.

Sun Life’s stock closed down 1.58 per cent at $48.63.

“While Sun’s ability to maintain the strong earnings from the preceding quarter is a positive, we note that the sequential and yearover-year decline in contributi­on from Asia will likely be viewed negatively,” said John Aiken, an analyst with Barclays in Toronto in a note to clients.

“Management noted that the weaker performanc­e was driven by higher new business strain, lower gains and higher expenses driven by investing in the business.”

The underlying fundamenta­ls of the economy in Asia still point toward “strong growth,” said Sun Life Financial Asia president Claude Accum.

Philippine­s and India showed strong quarterly growth, while there was some slowdown in broker sales in Hong Kong, he told analysts Thursday.

“That growth is not going to emerge in a straight line each quarter, but the underlying growth is robust.”

Meanwhile, while Manulife’s latest quarterly results were positively viewed, comments by a prominent short-seller about the potential negative consequenc­es of an impending court verdict continued to cast a shadow.

U.S. short-seller Muddy Waters said last month that Manulife’s life insurance subsidiary’s recent trial in Saskatchew­an involving an insurance contract purchased by a hedge fund called Mosten Investment LP, depending on the judge’s verdict, could lead to “billions of dollars of losses.” Mosten argued that it can deposit an unlimited amount of money with Manulife through the contract and received an annualized guaranteed return of at least four per cent — terms which could “financiall­y cripple” the Canadian insurer.

Manulife’s chief executive Roy Gori called this claim “commercial­ly absurd” on Thursday, reiteratin­g the company’s view that this is contrary to the purpose of these insurance policies and associated regulation.

On a call with analysts discussing its latest earnings, Gori pointed to recent amendments to Saskatchew­an insurance regulation­s which would limit the amount of premiums a life insurer may receive or accept for deposit in life insurance policies and associated side accounts.

Gori reiterated that Manulife intends to make submission­s to the court, in light of these new regulation­s, to dismiss the Mosten case.

“We believe this should accelerate the resolution of the principal litigation matters in our favour . ... We remain highly confident that we will ultimately prevail in this matter and that it will not have any material impact on our business operations.”

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Manulife’s profit for the quarter ended Sept. 30 surged 42 per cent to $1.57 billion.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Manulife’s profit for the quarter ended Sept. 30 surged 42 per cent to $1.57 billion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada